Pipeline protesters given exit deadline

James MacPherson, Associated Press

Published
4:30 am CST, Sunday, November 27, 2016

Tom Stromme | Bismarck Tribune (AP) People stand on the edge of Cantapeta Creek near the growing Sacred Stones Overflow Protest Camp in Morton County, North Dakota. The leader of the Cheyenne River Sioux in South Dakota is calling for all opponents of the Dakota Access oil pipeline to boycott businesses in North Dakota’s capital city. less

Tom Stromme | Bismarck Tribune (AP) People stand on the edge of Cantapeta Creek near the growing Sacred Stones Overflow Protest Camp in Morton County, North Dakota. The leader of the Cheyenne River Sioux in ... more

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Tom Stromme | Bismarck Tribune (AP) People stand on the edge of Cantapeta Creek near the growing Sacred Stones Overflow Protest Camp in Morton County, North Dakota. The leader of the Cheyenne River Sioux in South Dakota is calling for all opponents of the Dakota Access oil pipeline to boycott businesses in North Dakota’s capital city. less

Tom Stromme | Bismarck Tribune (AP) People stand on the edge of Cantapeta Creek near the growing Sacred Stones Overflow Protest Camp in Morton County, North Dakota. The leader of the Cheyenne River Sioux in ... more

Pipeline protesters given exit deadline

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North Dakota officials are encouraging hundreds of Dakota Access oil pipeline protesters to respect a directive to leave a sprawling, months-old encampment on federal land, but one organizer says that isn’t likely.

According to Standing Rock Sioux tribal leader Dave Archambault, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers sent him a letter Friday that said all federal lands north of the Cannonball River will be closed to public access Dec. 5 for “safety concerns,” including the oncoming winter and the increasingly contentious clashes between protesters and police.

The line, being built by Dallas-based Energy Transfer Partners, would carry oil across South Dakota and Iowa to Illinois, where the crude would be shipped to Midwest and Gulf Coast refineries.

The pipeline will cut a large swath through west-central Illinois, entering the state near Hancock in Carthage County and traveling southeast to Patoka in Marion County.

A portion of the pipeline will be in Schuyler, Brown, Pike, Morgan, Scott and Macoupin counties in west-central Illinois — including near Mount Sterling and Meredosia. Construction has already started in the region.

The Oceti Sakowin camp is on Corps land in southern North Dakota and is where the vast majority of the several hundred people fighting against the four-state, $3.8 billion pipeline have created a self-sustaining community and put up semi-permanent structures in advance of the harsh winter.

The encampment is near the confluence of the Missouri and Cannonball rivers, and more than a mile from a Missouri River reservoir under which the pipeline will pass. That final large segment is yet to be completed, held up while the Corps consults with the tribe, who believe the project could harm drinking water and Native American cultural sites.

The Corps’ letter, according to Archambault, said that those who stay on the land after the deadline may be prosecuted, and that there’ll be a free speech zone south of the river.

But Dallas Goldtooth, a protest organizer with the Indigenous Environmental Network, believes many people will chose not to move to another site, and that protesters are building shelters and teepees to prepare for the winter.

Goldtooth also said the government’s request will escalate already rocky tensions, calling the directive “an atrocious example that colonization has not ended for us here as indigenous people.”

On Friday, Archambault, whose tribe offered protesters land on its reservation south of the river earlier this fall, said “our resolve to protect our water is stronger than ever.”

Representatives from the Army Corps of Engineers didn’t immediately return multiple messages Friday or Saturday seeking comment and verification of the letter. Last month, the Corps said it would not evict the encampment, which started as overflow from smaller private and permitted protest sites nearby and began growing in August.

President Barack Obama raised the possibility of rerouting the pipeline in that area earlier this month, something Kelcy Warren, CEO of Texas-based pipeline developer Energy Transfer Partners, told The Associated Press is not an option from the company’s standpoint. Obama said his administration is monitoring the “challenging situation” but would “let it play out for several more weeks.”

Some of the protests have resulted in violent confrontations and more than 500 people have been arrested since August.

It’s the federal government’s job to peacefully close the camp because it allowed people to stay there in the first place, Gov. Jack Dalrymple said in a statement Saturday.

“Our state and local law enforcement agencies continue to do all they can to keep private property and public infrastructure free from unpermitted protest activities, and its past time that the federal government provides the law enforcement resources … to enforce their own order to vacate,” the Republican said.

Republican U.S. Sen. John Hoeven and Democratic U.S. Sen. Heidi Heitkamp said the protesters need to move for public safety.

“The well-being and property of ranchers, farmers and everyone else living in the region should not be threatened by protesters who are willing to commit acts of violence,” Hoeven said in a statement Friday. He also called on the Obama administration to let work on the pipeline move forward, saying, “this difficult situation has gone on too long and we need to get it resolved.”

Heitkamp said the Corps’ order is “a needed step to support the safety of residents, workers, protesters and law enforcement.”